国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Image

The Spoke Word: Tour de France Stage 3 report

Published: 

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

An untimely flat dealt a serious blow to Lance Armstrong鈥檚 Tour de France hopes as the most anticipated day of the Tour鈥檚 first week delivered on the hype. The cobbles of Stage 3 shredded the peloton, rearranged the overall standings, and knocked one favorite out of the race altogether, as Frank Schleck went out with a broken collarbone.

Norwegian sprinter Thor Hushovd, of Cervelo Test Team, won the stage, sprinting out of a six-man group that included Prologue-winner Fabian Cancellara, who moved back into yellow, and Cancellara鈥檚 Saxo Bank teammate Andy Schleck. The latter is Frank鈥檚 teammate and younger brother, and most observers鈥 number-two pick for the overall behind Alberto Contador.

BMC鈥檚 Australian captain, Cadel Evans, also finished in the front group and moved up to third overall, 39 seconds behind Cancellara, with Schleck now sixth, at 1:09. Contador, the only other pre-race favorite currently in the top ten, sits in ninth at 1:40. Armstrong, who was near the front group and almost a minute ahead of Contador when he flatted with about 10 miles to go, dropped to 18th overall, 2:30 behind the yellow jersey.

Today鈥檚 132-mile route from Belgium to northern France included six sectors of harsh cobblestones toward the end of the stage. Armstrong鈥檚 hope was that he would be able to gain time over featherweight climbers like Contador and Andy Schleck, who tend to suffer on the rough roads.

With about three sectors to go and the field broken up into several small groups, it looked as if Armstrong would indeed gain time on Contador and, at the very least, not lose any to Schleck. He flatted while riding in the gutter next to a section of cobbles, however, and his rivals distanced him as he waited for a wheel change. He spent most of the remaining miles riding alone, trying to limit his losses and rolled across the line more than two minutes down on Schleck and 55 seconds behind Contador.

After three crash-filled stages that have seen off not only Frank Schleck but also GC contender Christian Vande Velde of team Garmin-Transitions鈥攚hile leaving nearly every other rider in the race with cuts, bruises, or hairline fractures鈥攖he race enters four flat, relatively calm stages that should see little change to the overall as the sprinters come to the front.

The next shakeup should come on Sunday, as the race enters the Alps.There鈥檚 not a rider in cycling who has shown that he can climb with Contador when the Spaniard attacks. His rivals could target the time trials, but this year鈥檚 Tour has only one, a 31-mile test on stage 19鈥攁nd Contador has developed into one of the best time-trialists in the world, anyway.

Right now Evans would seem to be Contador鈥檚 biggest threat, as he can climb and, unlike Andy Schleck, can also time trial. But Evans鈥 career is littered with mid-race meltdowns鈥攐ff days that see him drop down the standings. It鈥檚 true that anyone can have a bad day. But it鈥檚 also true that Contador has never had one, at least not in a race he was trying to win. This Tour is now his to lose.

鈥擩ohn Bradley

@johnwbradley

Filed to:

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online